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Rich Braman 1b4b58139c Re-publish Scharf Insecticide MOA session with updated deliverables
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-03-17 22:16:54 -04:00

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tags
tags
Structural
Entomology
Scharf
Insecticides

Insecticide Classification and Mode of Action

GTBOP Structural Pest Control — October 18, 2017

Speaker: Dr. Michael Scharf, O.W. Rawlins Orkin Endowed Chair in Urban Entomology and Molecular Physiology, Purdue University Moderator: Dr. Dan Suiter, Extension Entomologist, University of Georgia Duration: ~67 minutes (1:07:06) CEU Categories: Georgia Cat 35 (Industrial/Structural); multi-state credits in 8 states and 3 Canadian provinces


Deliverables

Stage Deliverable Status
1 Corrections Log Complete
2 Archive Summary Complete
3 YouTube Version Complete
3 Website Version Complete
3 Extension Agent Version Complete
4 Quiz Complete
4 Matching Exercises Complete
5 Prose Transcript Complete
Corrected SRT Complete

Writing Resources

Resource Description
Bulletin Outline Publication structure mapped to presentation content
Reference Compendium Consolidated tables of classifications, products, and terminology
Source Guide Transcript-to-publication navigation map

Session Overview

Dr. Michael Scharf of Purdue University presented a comprehensive overview of insecticide classification and mode of action designed to strengthen pest management professionals' understanding of how their chemical tools work. Scharf framed the practical importance of this knowledge around six themes: applicator and customer safety, accurate interpretation of trade literature, pollinator protection, resistance management, product sustainability, and the ability to design customized applications through situational pest management.

The presentation systematically covered five neurotoxic insecticide classifications — sodium channel agents, chloride channel agents, acetylcholine receptor agents, acetylcholinesterase inhibitors, and combination products — followed by four non-neurotoxic classifications including diamides, insect growth regulators, inhibitors of energy production, and cuticle dehydrating dusts. Scharf concluded with practical factors affecting insecticide performance, resistance management strategies, and a Q&A session moderated by Dr. Suiter.


Source: Corrected SRT — GTBOP_Transcript_2017-10-18_InsecticideMOA.srt Processed: 2026-03-17 | Pipeline v4.1